Airbus SE failed to secure any aircraft orders for a third month this year, as the collapse in global air travel battered demand for new jetliners. The European planemaker attracted zero purchases in June, according to a company statement Wednesday. The manufacturer suffered one cancellation, a spokesman confirmed, bringing total net orders to 298 aircraft so far this year.
Airbus last week announced plans to cut 15,000 jobs at its jetliner arm after lowering build rates by one-third in April amid the coronavirus pandemic. Shares of the Toulouse, France-based company were up 0.6% at 9:05 a.m. Thursday in Paris. They have slumped 50% this year.
Aircraft lessor Avolon Holdings Ltd. said Tuesday it had scrapped a commitment for one A330neo due in 2022, as well as pushing back the arrival of three A320neo-series narrow-bodies. Boeing Co. took a bigger hit, with Avolon exiting contracts for 27 737 Max planes on top of 75 earlier cancellations.
Airbus’s handovers of new jets have been sustained by the adoption of a process that delegates some pre-delivery checks to the manufacturer’s own engineers, overcoming issues with travel curbs.